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Ralph da Costa Nunez

Ralph da Costa Nunez

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One Size Does Not Fit All: Rapid Rehousing and Homeless Families

Posted: 07/16/10 02:12 PM ET

Over the last two decades, rapid rehousing strategies have grown to become the dominant trend among the homeless policy and services community. Yet New York City is emerging as an example of how a narrow focus on housing can have serious unintended consequences for so many homeless families. A June 2010 Institute for Children, Poverty, and Homelessness (ICPH) brief linking aggressive rehousing to recidivism in New York City, Boomerang Homeless Families, raises questions as to the efficacy of rapid rehousing in ensuring the long-term self-sufficiency of homeless families.

Rapid rehousing is an iteration of the Housing First strategy, an approach which identifies stable housing as the most pressing need of the homeless and posits that any other needs can be dealt with by accessing mainstream resources afterwards. In contrast, the Continuum of Care approach utilizes an array of housing options and support services designed to move homeless families from emergency shelter to transitional housing to permanent housing and to provide services at each stage. Services offered along the way are intended to help clients achieve housing stability by preparing them for self-sufficiency.

Housing First has been very successful in getting primarily chronically homeless single adults off of the streets, out of emergency shelters, and quickly into permanent housing with access to mainstream services. More recently, this strategy, which was successful for a very specific population, has been applied to homeless families with children. In fact, rapid rehousing was codified into federal law in 2009 with the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-housing Program (HPRP), which aims to prevent and mitigate homelessness through rapid rehousing assistance, and the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act (HEARTH), which expressly emphasizes rapid rehousing for homeless families. These funding streams have fundamentally changed the way localities approach family homelessness, yet it remains unclear if the strategy works well for families.

Rapid rehousing applies the same Housing First principle to all families, regardless of needs, and despite the fact that the causes of family homelessness are complex and families often face multiple barriers to self-sufficiency. The strategy's short-term focus on housing ignores the multi-faceted realities of these families' lives--relegating adult education, job training, income supports, domestic violence issues, or health problems to secondary importance. Data are beginning to show that rapid rehousing may have serious longer-term consequences for families and family shelter systems.

Boomerang Homeless Families finds that in New York City, the shift to aggressive rehousing in 2005 fueled recidivism: between that year and 2009, the number of families entering shelter increased by 58% while recidivism rose by 137%, and it is projected to reach 179% at the end of this fiscal year. This dramatic increase in recidivism following enactment of aggressive rehousing policies suggests that it was related to immediately moving families from transitional shelters to permanent housing before they were ready and able to retain independent housing through self-sufficiency. These families may not have had access to the services targeted to their specific needs that would have been available to them in shelter.

These policies have been costly to the City; prior to aggressive rehousing, the average cost of recidivism was declining and around $68 million a year--post-aggressive rehousing, the cost rose to about $141 million a year. While rapid rehousing resulted in quickly moving families out of shelter, and thus reducing the shelter census and length of stay, they have not been effective in achieving the long-term goal of permanently transitioning families to self-sufficiency. Clearly, reducing the shelter census should not be the goal--permanent self-sufficiency should be.

It is becoming increasingly clear that aggressive rehousing has failed in New York City, even though the City leadership has the political will to address the problem, a relatively large prevention system, and well-coordinated access to mainstream resources. Given this, there is little to suggest that these aggressive rehousing policies will work in other localities that may lack education, job training, and employment supports and the political commitment to address family homelessness with a comprehensive strategy.

More research is needed to understand why families come back into the shelter system so that we can create interventions to improve self-sufficiency. The rapid rehousing approach should be vigorously evaluated alongside the Continuum of Care approach to examine the long-term impact of these strategies on homeless families. Policymakers should closely monitor the rates at which rapidly rehoused families return to the shelter system and should anticipate that the recent 2009 HPRP and HEARTH funding, which dramatically shifted homeless services towards rapid rehousing, will have unintended consequences. The effects are likely only just beginning to show up in homeless data.

Going forward, it is necessary to examine and track the impact and outcomes of rapid rehousing in a meaningful way--with an eye to individual family needs as well as recidivism rates. While aggressive rehousing may be successful for some families, especially in the short-term, it may not be effective for many homeless families in the long-term. Shelters with targeted services can create "communities of opportunity," which effectively bridge the divide between homelessness and self-sufficiency. As part of a Continuum approach, shelters, when coupled with front-loaded services, can function as an effective tool in reducing family homelessness in the long run.

Lessons we are learning from New York City suggest that the rapid rehousing model should not be blindly replicated, but should instead be rigorously evaluated to better understand whom it works for and whom it does not.

 
 
 
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11:23 AM on 07/24/2010
One size does NOT fit all. Some families are homeless for other than fiscal reasons. The parent maybe be suffering from PSDT, active substance abuse or other mental health issues. They need the structure and support of a protected environment. 24/7 support to insure safety of adult and children and access to services on site is critical. Placing a family, in crisis, in to their own apartment may further intensify the situation and overwhelm the parent.

I see 3 major issues:

1. The all or nothing philosphy at the federal level: several years ago 70% of HUD was going to unaccompanied individuals with mental or physical disabilities (the "chronic homeless"), to the detriment of homeless families. Now they are trying to again cram every families into the same category. We need the Contiuum of Care to provide the "triage" needed to determine what each families requires in the way of service and resources,

2. The decreasing availability of funding for services to homeless families.

3. Perhaps the most critical: The lack of political will to develop safe, decent and truly affordable housing for people once they have been stabilized.
09:06 AM on 07/24/2010
Dr. Nunez incorrectly characterizes the Housing First approach; consequently his solutions are incorrect as well. Few Housing First proponents believe that mainstream services are available or effective; rather we believe that almost all problems are more easily addressed when individuals and families have permanent, stable housing. Securing that housing and providing effective services are, indeed, a serious challenge with extremely limited resources; the solution is to advocate vociferously for these resources in the context of legally enforceable rights.

The work of the Health Care for the Homeless movement is grounded in the recognition that all of our neighbors should have the right to housing, adequate incomes, and comprehensive health services. Housing First programs may only achieve the first of these rights for a very, very small number of individuals, but should not be discarded because their scope is inadequate.

Thus we celebrate the demise of the Continuum of Coercion. Rather than return to the "housing readiness" approach that denies what ought to be a right based on a "clinical" judgment, let's fight for an effective right to housing, to a living wage and adequate disability assistance, and for comprehensive health care. This will cause homelessness to be rare and brief; it will also provide an opportunity for many of us "homelessness experts" to write poetry instead.
04:41 PM on 07/23/2010
Great post. After two decades on the front lines designing, implementing and driving solutions for homeless people (mostly homeless families) I appreciate the views and facts expressed here. I'm not a big fan of the CoC model, nor am I of the Housing First and Rapid Rehousing models. I say this because both approaches are rooted in a philosophy of “containment”. They both have their merits and have done some good, but overall as a winnable battle plan to confront the impacts of homelessness on our children, families and communities…they simple are not winnable. They have failed us miserably. This report should serve as evidence. I don’t see any rebuttals from the Housing First or Rapid Rehousing camps. Why? For eight years I have been saying that Housing First is a niche solution for a small percentage of homeless people and that if applied to the masses as a solution it would implode.
Personally I like the Solutions University model being that is being implemented across multiple jurisdictions in northern San Diego (pop 1.1M). It takes the best of transitional and permanent housing and blends it together with the education, income and health related solutions needed to defeat the impacts of homelessness, permanently.
03:28 PM on 07/23/2010
Finally! As an Executive Director of a homeless shelter in Michigan, it is refreshing to finally see some of the numbers supporting what we in the field already know to be true. Housing intitiatives do not work without strong supportive case management and client centered appraches to independence. Shelters who actually have a history with the population are often cut out of the "housing" process and funding is diverted to organizations who promise to put every homeless person in housing. Most of the people coming through shelters have barriers to self sufficiency that must be addressed. But the families needing assistance require a complete "unlearning" of their old way of surviving which is no longer an option.

It is so important that we all become educated about who this new faceless population is. Most of them still attend church every Sunday and their children are still dropped off at school each day, but what the community doesn't know is that now they sleep in their minivans instead of transporting soccer equipment!

Thanks for getting the real discussion started!
07:25 PM on 07/18/2010
Jobs, affordable housing and a break regarding Con Ed (energy) is all anyone needs unless the homeless individual(s) have some of the emotional difficulties described in the article. Hopefully the rapid housing program will continue so that other homeless people won't be punished by the rate of recidivism. It's heartening to hear that the homeless have not been completely abandoned in NYC.
03:12 PM on 07/17/2010
I don't believe we need to eliminate shelter and transitional housing in favor of rapid rehousing...but we do need to carefully assess the needs of each family and target the intervention that is likely to resolve their homelessness in the most efficient and effective way. It just makes sense that the families with the fewest issues are the best candidates for rapid rehousing, and may not ever even need to be admitted to shelter. The families with more issues may need 1-3 months stay in shelter and perhaps even a shallow subsidy for a while to achieve stability. And the most complex families (with no income, little education, criminal records, etc) may need a longer intervention. They are the ones who should be targeted for the longest, most expensive intervention (transitional housing).

HUD is in the process of conducting a research study on various interventions - the systems the way they currently operate, rapid rehousing with services, and rapid rehousing without services. That study paired with the outcomes of the Rapid Rehousing demonstration projects across the country should provide helpful information to the rest of us.

Bottom line, our systems need to be more focused on ending homelessness as quickly as is possible for each family...but we need not throw out the baby with the bath water. Strategy is key.